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This chapter explores the relationship between organizations and information systems, including the impact of information systems on organizations, how they support managerial activities, and the challenges of building successful information systems for competitive advantage.
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Chapter 3 Information Systems, Organizations,Management, and Strategy
Objectives • What do managers need to know about organizations in order to build and use information systems successfully? • What impact do information systems have on organizations? • How do information systems support the activities of managers in organizations?
Objectives • How can businesses use information systems for competitive advantage? • Why is it so difficult to build successful information systems, including systems that promote competitive advantage?
Management Challenges • Sustainability of competitive advantages • Fitting technology to the organization (or vice versa).
Organizations and Information Systems The two-way relationship between organizations and information technology Figure 3-1
Organizations and Information Systems What Is an Organization? Technical Definition • Stable, formal social structure that takes resources from the environment and processes them to produce outputs Behavioral Definition • A collection of rights, privileges, obligations, and responsibilities that are delicately balanced over a period of time through conflict and conflict resolution
Organizations and Information Systems The technical microeconomic definition of the organization Figure 3-2
Organizations and Information Systems The behavioral view of organizations Figure 3-3
Organizations and Information Systems Common Features of Organizations Structural Characteristics of All Organizations • Clear division of labor • Hierarchy • Explicit rules and procedures • Impartial judgments • Technical qualifications for positions • Maximum organizational efficiency
Organizations and Information Systems Common Features of Organizations Additional Features of Organizations • Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs): Precise procedures to cope with all expected situations • Organizational Politics: Struggle to resolve divergent viewpoints within the organization • Organizational Culture: Fundamental assumptions about what products the organization should produce
Organizations and Information Systems Unique Features of Organizations Organizational Types • Entrepreneurial: Start up business • Machine bureaucracy: Midsize manufacturing firm • Divisionalized bureaucracy: Fortune 500 firms • Professional bureaucracy: Law firms, hospitals, school systems • Adhocracy: Consulting firm
Organizations and Information Systems Environments and organizations have a reciprocal relationship Figure 3-4
Organizational type Environments Goals Power Constituencies Function Leadership Tasks Technology Business processes Organizations and Information Systems Unique Features of Organizations All organizations have different:
Organizations and Information Systems Window on Organizations E-Commerce French and German Style What organizational factors explain why France and Germany have had such different experiences adopting e-commerce?
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations Information Technology Infrastructure and Information Technology Services Information Services Department Past: Consisted primarily of programmers, building own software and managing own computing facilities Today: A growing proportion of specialists, with department acting as powerful change agent in the organization
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations Information technology services Figure 3-5
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations How Information Systems Affect Organizations Economic Theories • Information system technology is a factor of production, freely substituted for capital and labor • Transaction cost theory: Information technology can help lower the cost of market participation
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations The transaction cost theory of the impact of information technology on the organization Figure 3-6
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations How Information Systems Affect Organizations Economic Theories – The Agency Theory • Agents (employees) need supervision • As firm grows, agency and coordination costs rise • Information technology reduces agency costs because it becomes easier for managers to oversee more employees
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations The agency cost theory of the impact of information technology on the organization Figure 3-7
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations How Information Systems Affect Organizations Behavioral Theories • IT could change hierarchy of decision making by lowering costs of information acquisition and distribution • Organization shape could “flatten” as decision making becomes more decentralized • Growth of “virtual organizations” • Information systems seen as outcome of political competition between subgroups
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations Organizational resistance and the mutually adjusting relationship between technology and the organization Figure 3-8
The Changing Role of Information Systems in Organizations The Internet and Organizations • The Internet is capable of dramatically reducing transaction and agency costs • Businesses are rapidly rebuilding some key business processes based on Internet technology • Internet technology becoming a key component of IT infrastructure
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems The Role of Managers in Organizations Classical Model: Five Functions of Managers • Planning • Organizing • Coordinating • Deciding • Controlling
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems The Role of Managers in Organizations Behavioral Models: Five Attributes of Managers • Perform much work at non-stop pace • Fragmented activities • Prefer speculation, hearsay, current and ad-hoc information • Prefer oral communication • Maintain diverse web of contacts as informal information system.
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems The Role of Managers in Organizations Managerial Role Categories • Interpersonal:Figurehead, leader, liaison • Informational:Nerve center, disseminator, spokesperson • Decisional:Entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Managers and Decision Making Decision Making Classified by Organizational Level • Strategic: determines long-term objectives, resources, policies • Management control: monitors effective usage of resources, performance • Operational control: determines how to perform tasks and ways to distribute information
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Managers and Decision Making Decisions are classified as: • Unstructured:Nonroutine, decision maker provides judgment, evaluation, and insights into problem definition, no agreed-upon procedure for decision making • Structured:Repetitive, routine, handled using a definite procedure
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Information systems and levels of decision making Figure 3-9
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Managers and Decision Making Stages of Decision Making • Intelligence: Collect information, identify problem • Design: Conceive alternative solution to a problem • Choice: Select among the alternative solutions • Implementation: Put decision into effect and provide report on the progress of solution
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems The decision-making process Figure 3-10
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Managers and Decision Making Models of Decision Making • Rational model: people engage in consistent, rational decision making. Individuals rank all alternatives and select the one that most contributes to their goal • Critics point out that individuals can’t rank all possible alternatives; tend to select first viable alternative • Built-in biases, frame of reference, distort decision making
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Managers and Decision Making Models of Decision Making • Cognitive style: Describes underlying personality dispositions toward decision making • Systematic decision makers • Intuitive decision makers
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Managers and Decision Making Models of Decision Making • Organizational models • Bureaucratic models • Political models • “Garbage can” model
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Window on Management Why War Games Can’t Always Simulate the Battlefield • How useful are war games in simulating combat scenarios and predicting outcomes? • How would the models of decision making described here explain how they are designed and performed?
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Implications for the Design and Understanding of Information Systems Organizational Factors in Planning New Systems • Organization’s environment • Structure of organization • Organization’s culture and politics • Type of organization and leadership style • Principle interest groups and attitudes of workers • Kinds of tasks, decisions, processes system will assist
Managers, Decision Making, and Information Systems Implications for the Design and Understanding of Information Systems Optimal Information Systems: • Flexible; provide many options for handling and evaluating data • Support a variety of styles, skills, knowledge; keep track of many alternatives • Sensitive to organization’s bureaucratic and political requirements
Information Systems and Business Strategy What Is a Strategic Information System? • Computer system at any level of an organization • Changes goals, operations, products, services, or environmental relationships • Helps organization gain a competitive advantage
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Business Competitive Strategies • Become the low-cost producer • Differentiate product or service • Change scope of competition by enlarging or narrowing market
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Value Chain Model • Firm seen as series or “chain” of activities that add a margin of value to firm’s products or services • Highlights activities in business where competitive strategies are best applied • Primary or support activities • Firm’s value chain linked to value chains of other partners
Information Systems and Business Strategy The firm value chain and the industry value chain Figure 3-11
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Value Web • Value chain extended by Internet technology that connects all the firm’s suppliers, partners, and customers • Collection of independent firms using IT to coordinate value chains to collectively produce a product or service • More customer-driven, less linear than value chain • Flexible, adaptive to changes in supply and demand
Information Systems and Business Strategy The value web Figure 3-12
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Product Differentiation • Strategy for creating brand loyalty by developing new and unique products and services not easily duplicated by competitors • Information systems used to create new information technology-based products and services • Examples: ATMs, computerized reservation services
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Focused Differentiation • Strategy for developing new market niches for specialized products and services • Information systems used to produce data for sales and marketing; analyze customer behavior • Examples: One-to-one and customized marketing
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Efficient Customer Response Systems • Links consumer behavior back to distribution, production, and supply chains • Information systems used to link customer’s value chain to firm’s value chain • Reduce inventory costs; deliver product or service more quickly to customer
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-Level Strategy and the Value Chain Model Switching Costs • Cost of switching to competitive product; higher switching costs discourage customers going to competitors • Information systems offer convenience, ease of use, raise switching costs • Stockless inventory systems
Information Systems and Business Strategy Stockless inventory compared to traditional and just-in-time supply methods Figure 3-13
Information Systems and Business Strategy Business-level strategy Figure 3-14
Information Systems and Business Strategy Firm-Level Strategy and Information Technology At firm level, information technology can: • Promote synergies between business units, pool resources • Tie together operations of disparate business units • Improve core competencies